
 Originally Posted by 
Saurus
					
				 
				I.... What.... Sir, I rarely say this.... But you seem to just have no idea what you're talking about whatsoever.
First off. I'm new-school-as-fuck, not some "old-hat". The S4 was my second DJ controller ever. I know all of what I know about gear through playing around with other artists' gear.
Next, your rant about build quality is... I'm blown away. I find it hard to believe that you've ever touched an S4, and I'm not sure you know much about DJ equipment at all. "smooth, short body faders"? You have a DJM-2000, and you think the S4 faders are smooth??? I'm calling shenanigans here, sir. Either you don't own a DJM-2000, or you've never used an S4. Further, "short-bodied"? Are you claiming that the pitch faders being short is a good thing? Now I'm questioning if you're even a DJ. 
Apparently you've never touched a DJM-2000, the faders aren't that incredible, and aren't anything above Pioneer's usual fader quality. They're actually very similar to the S4s faders, short body faders with no rails. They trade a tiny bit of wobble for not having that plastic feel to them, but both of them are rather smooth. The 2000s faders aren't like the Nexus, they don't have rails, and thus feel like most short body faders out there, and the S4's aren't scratchy at all, but have a bit of a plasticly feel. 
Apparently you don't know the difference between "short body" and "short throw," the later being the length of the fader, and the former being the depth of the fader body, usually translating to the weight of the fader. Both the 2000 and the S4 have short body faders, some of the smallest faders available, the difference being that the S4 has a slight plastic feel to them. Both have similar amounts of weight.
Bolted metal stems are pretty much standard, I don't know many controllers that don't have them, and they're hardly something to brag about. "uncrackable buttons"? Really...? How-the-fuck often do buttons crack on controllers.... WTF? 
If you've ever used Numark's NDX/4trak buttons, you'd see it happen all the time. Hard plastic buttons that aren't constructed well have a tendency to get launched into the floor or snapped in half when being hammered on by DJs every night. That's why you usually see rubberized buttons, or Pioneer sytle over engineered plastic switches. Fun fact: the 4Trak has plastic stems, and horrendous faders
And the jogs, as we've previously covered are not the same as on a CDJ 2000 AT ALL. 
It's the same technology, no matter how much you scream, even if the S4's travel is a bit longer than the Pioneer's, touch sensitive jogs are kind of a joke
The design for the 4-track is fucking great, I dunno wtf you're on about. I'm assuming you just don't use most of the controls it offers in your workflow, if you were able to switch to CDJs and a mixer. Also, you've made it clear that you've never touched one... The build quality is at least fairly good.... And MILES beyond the S4. Those buttons arent amazing, but they're, again, MILES beyond the S4 buttons.
Like I said above, it doesn't have the "industry standard" metal stems, and has some of the worst faders I've ever felt on a piece of hardware. It's crossfader is Numark's midrange fader, that should give you a clue. And it's switches are exactly the same as the shittastic NDX series, which was famous for launching cue switches through the floor, or microswitches going out. The only thing it has is a metal case, and that's completely useless
Honestly... The only thing I can think of that would spawn this ill-informed silliness you just spouted is can be summed up with.... "Nice try, Native Instruments"
Nice try, I actually don't like NI at all, but I see their place in the market.
			
		 
	
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